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08-08-2013, 06:32 PM | #21 | ||||||||
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Here are my comments from that post: Quote:
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I expanded at #794 “ Quote:
And at #799 you described Philo’s Logos theory citing Jesus the Branch in Zechariah as a “transition fossil.” Quote:
Here it is useful to look at the memetic evolution of the concept of Nazareth. This term goes back to the story of Noah, through the Nazirite holy order of Samuel and Samson. It then emerges in Zechariah’s cryptic comment that Jesus has the name Branch (netser), a claim apparently referring to Isaiah 11:1 where Jesus is called Jesse’s Branch – weneser yisay, a name that sounds similar enough to Jesus of Nazareth to explore the etymology. When the Nazarene Watchers encountered the Roman Empire, my view is that they hid their identity behind the name Jesus of Nazareth, the Root of Jesse. As in John’s statement that Jesus is the true vine, the claim of transmission through a Nazarene holy order indicates a genetic connection between the story of Jesus and its origins in Jewish prophecy. This genetic connection is memetic in structure. The evolution of the snake in the tree in the Garden of Eden to the snake on a pole described in Numbers 6 to Christ on the cross as described at John 3:14 is a good example of memetic evolution within Christianity. Quote:
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08-08-2013, 06:33 PM | #22 | ||
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*Slap*. I'm offended that such a request for a citation could be considered an offense. :angry:
Michael Knibb has a collection of essays from his career, published by Brill in 2009, Essays on the Book of Enoch and Other Early Jewish Texts and Traditions. Chapter 8 is "The Date of the Parables of Enoch: A Critical Review". He ends with his own tentative (as are they all) date: "the Parables could be seen as being written in reaction to the events of 66–73 C.E." (p.160) (The essay that is this chapter was probably written about 30 years ago.) Quote:
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08-09-2013, 08:25 AM | #23 | |
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Essentially, your interpretation of an ONLY heavenly Jesus is baseless and without a shred of corroboration in or out the NT Canon. The evidence from antiquity does show that the Pauline Corpus was composed by authors who knew the story of Jesus in the Gospels. 1. It is a fact that that Jesus cult writers who wrote about Paul claimed that he began to preach about the Jesus story AFTER it was already known and that Paul PERSECUTED the believers. 2. It is also a fact that there are NO Pauline letters to Churches mentioned by the very author of Acts who wrote about the activities of Paul from time he Persecuted believers until he was in Rome c 59-62 CE. 3. It is also a fact that 2nd century Jesus cult writers did NOT mention the Pauline Corpus, show NO influence by Paul and did NOT acknowledge Paul as the one who evangelized the Roman Empire--it was the 12 DISCIPLES. 4. It is a fact that the Pauline writer wrote about a Crucified and Resurrected Jesus, the Son of God made of a woman --Not an ONLY heavenly Jesus without an earthly mother. 5. It is a fact that Origen claimed Celsus wrote nothing of Paul--Celsus wrote "True Discourse" c 175 CE. It is irrelevant whether or not Philo wrote about a Logos because Philo did NOT mention any King of the Jews or Messianic ruler called Jesus of Nazareth, did not refer to himself as a Christian and did NOT acknowledge any person called Paul, a Pharisee, of the Tribe of Benjamin who evangelized the Roman Empire. Based on the Pauline Corpus, Jesus was Lord, the Savior, the Messianic ruler, Equal to God, the Creator and his teachings were supposedly documented and circulated in the Roman Empire yet Philo wrote about a Mad Man called Carabbas who was a laughing stock when he was attired as a King--but nothing of the Jesus and Nothing of Paul. Philo and Josephus should have been contemporaries of Paul and failed to mention the teachings or influence of the Pauline Corpus on the Jews and the Roman Empire. Up to the end of 1st century when Josephus completed all his works there is ZERO of Paul the Pharisee and ZERO influence, awareness and acknowledgementof the Pauline Corpus with or without an ONLY heavenly Jesus There was NO expectation of an ONLY heavenly Messianic ruler by Jews and this is corroborated by Josephus, Tacitus and Suetonius. The Jews expected a Physical Messianic ruler c 66-70 CE. See Wars of the Jews 6.5.4, Tacitus Histories 5 and Suetonius Life of Vespasian. In fact, Vespasian was believed to be the Predicted Messianic ruler. So, in a nutshell, your evolution of Jesus belief is wholly erroneous and is known to have NO supporting evidence from antiquity. You will NEVER produce any writing of antiquity that states the Pauline Jesus was always believed to be in heaven and NEVER on earth. |
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08-09-2013, 03:02 PM | #24 | |
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Of course. :devil:
The last time I looked at the matter, and that cursorily, was in 2010 (it's somewhere in the archives that cannot be named - Oh OK, it's here). While attempting to see iof the text of any of the relevant articles were online, I ran across this. Ted M Erho, Historical-allusional dating and the Similitudes of Enoch (JBL, Sep. 22, 2011). It comes second hand from a site that hosts poorly scanned copies of Journal articles, and the formatting is a bit rough, forcing me to spend a while doing my thing with it to make it comprehensible. CONCLUSIONI'm not particularly impressed by this article. DCH Quote:
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08-09-2013, 03:19 PM | #25 |
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Also published in 2011 and without Erho's attitude, Leslie W. Walck in his book The Son of Man in the Parables of Enoch and in Matthew (T.&T. Clark) writes the following conclusion to his dating discussion (22-23). I don't hold to it, but Walck is claiming this is a widely held view among specialists on the issue.
[t2]The dating of Par. En. then, can be narrowed by a consideration of these four elements: the kings and mighty ones, the bloodshed, the Parthians and Medes, and the hot springs. These elements reveal social and historical realities in a general way. And yet the realities discerned in these allusions narrow the possibilities for the dating of Par. En. Herod perhaps even served as the model for Par. En’s depiction of the kings and the mighty ones. Herod could be charged with idolatry, and bloodshed. He came to power in conjunction with the Parthian invasion in the middle of the century, and fell prey to intense, tragic, familial mistrust. He also sought relief in the hot springs, but ironically found none, and soon afterward died of his ailments (4 bce). While Herod might have been the model for the author, he was only a model, since the author betrays no details that are specific enough to link these descriptions directly and only to Herod. Thus, these four elements are helpful in narrowing the dating of Par. En., suggesting that Par. En. was written in the late first century bce or early first century ce. This dating was confirmed by a broad consensus of scholars at the Third Enoch Seminar in Camaldoli, Italy in June of 2005.(42) As Paolo Sacchi noted in his summary, “in sum, we may observe those scholars who have directly addressed the problem of dating the Parables all agree on a date around the time of Herod ... given the impressive amount of evidence gathered in support of a pre-Christian origin of the document. The burden of proof has now shifted to those who disagree with the Herodian date. It is now their responsibility to provide evidence that would reopen the discussion.”(43) (42) See the essays on dating the Parables in Gabriele Boccaccini, Enoch and the Messiah Son of Man (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 2007) 415–496. (43) Paolo Sacchi, “The 2005 Camaldoli Seminar on the Parables of Enoch: Summary and Prospects for Future Research,” in Boccaccini, Enoch and the Messiah Son of Man, 510–511.[/t2] |
08-09-2013, 06:38 PM | #26 | |
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What I find most interesting about the Parables/Similitudes of Enoch is the sense of social outrage over a ruling class that seemed to treat the common people, and their values, as garbage. I am not really sure that this sense of outrage, and glee in imagining what God's revenge upon these folks through the Son of Man will look like, has been related well to the historical clues these commentators put so much stock in.
The Parables of Enoch, as a book, has a great many similarities to other Enoch books such as the Noah fragments of the Book of Watchers, and especially the Epistles of Enoch, where the anti rich animus is also especially strong. Sometimes I am of the opinion that the Parables/Similitudes was a "mini" version of the other 4 Enoch books (Watchers, Astronomical, Visions and Epistles), which if true, could make it a Christian "imitation" of the "real" (Jewish) Enoch books. Other times, I am just not convinced that the Parables/Simitudes sound especially "Christian" despite the "son of Man" terminology. After all, the term basically means "the man (who will effect God's will)." Amen DCH Quote:
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08-10-2013, 08:48 AM | #27 | ||
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08-10-2013, 08:49 AM | #28 | |||
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08-10-2013, 02:28 PM | #29 |
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I was just putting together a thread starter on the topic. I'm sure you will contribute!
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08-10-2013, 02:42 PM | #30 |
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Philo's use of the term "Logos" was NOT part of the early evolution of the Jesus story.
There is NOTHING of the "Logos" or NO reference to Jesus as the Logos in gMark. Jesus as The Logos is DIRECTLY found in the LATER Gospel of gJohn. In fact, Jesus is immediately introduced as the Logos in the very first verse of gJohn. In gMark, it is AFTER the Baptism by John that the Jesus character began to act or display his Divine characteristics and there is no indication that the Markan Jesus was the Logos and God the Creator. The earliest stories of Jesus, the Synoptics, show that Jesus as the Logos was a Later invention in the evolution of Jesus belief. |
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